Search results
- Dr. Paul Ehrlich was the German physician who developed the first synthetic antimicrobial drug, 606 or Salvarsan. The film describes how Ehrlich first became interested in the properties of the then-new synthetic dyes and had an intuition that they could be useful in the diagnosis of bacterial diseases.
www.imdb.com/title/tt0032413/
People also ask
Is Dr Ehrlich's Magic Bullet based on a true story?
How did Ehrlich find a'magic bullet'?
What was ehrlich's'magic bullet'?
Why did Paul Ehrlich create'magic bullets'?
Why were Warner Bros concerned about Dr Ehrlich's Magic Bullet?
When was the magic bullet made?
Dr. Ehrlich's Magic Bullet is a 1940 American biographical film starring Edward G. Robinson and directed by William Dieterle, based on the true story of the German doctor and scientist Dr. Paul Ehrlich.
A biographical film of Ehrlich Dr. Ehrlich's Magic Bullet was made in 1940 by Warner Bros. It was directed by William Dieterle and starring Edward G. Robinson . The US Public Health Service adopted the abridged film as Magic Bullets for educational campaigns.
Dr. Ehrlich's Magic Bullet: Directed by William Dieterle. With Edward G. Robinson, Ruth Gordon, Otto Kruger, Donald Crisp. True story of the doctor who considered it was not immoral to search for a drug that would cure syphillis.
- (1.8K)
- Biography, Drama
- William Dieterle
- 1940-03-02
A biographical movie about a German physician Dr. Paul Ehrlich, and his struggle in finding a cure for syphilis.
May 12, 2008 · One hundred years ago, Paul Ehrlich, the founder of chemotherapy, received the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine. His postulate of creating 'magic bullets' for use in the fight against...
- Klaus Strebhardt, Axel Ullrich
- 2008
Ehrlich began an exhaustive search for an arsenic compound that would be a "magic bullet:" kill the microbe but not the person with the disease. In 1909, after testing over 900 different compounds...
May 8, 2016 · Dr Ehrlich’s Magic Bullet opens with a scene that, in 1940, must have seemed shockingly confrontational. Ehrlich is in his clinic at the hospital, treating a young man who is slumped over in despair, and who speaks brokenly of, “A girl in Munich” and their dreams of marriage.